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There assembled last evening at• Hare's 'Hotel, on Liberty7./Areht,';:feot of Fifth avenue, ar t - vninamig!tthering of the Re publicans of these two cities, in order to iffieetl36fittOlalmry Wilson, of Massachu setts,. anftto3„llettX..l2,l9l4igcup the . qsastions of the fahv*ge , ',lrtitt bit posing ii itself, Was brillian , y illuminated for the ()mann and was 'tiheied mottoesOrtkiiiid - iiiiiitiments, de , velnpipg ,nok, !ply but. the good :: ‘ rP the 4tes4 . Wl*ti . e4 Alter th e spe a ker 'Of tie 'eveLtii 'arrived; the meetinglarigaztir.htl nn toption•of Major B. A. Montooth, by the selection of the IblltivOnvailloarsr L itcKn'lttft. Wee Presidents. John ir.-vinbera - pbt, Thomas Efate; ' Riser,- w. A. Harrun, Esq., - ,— Henry Hays A. S. , Captoiscpard,GraT, J. M. Hu -0+ Dr ar t . auttga, , Eciwan. curiae, ' ' Alrrec Hralre, JohnOchae.. , ., JO4ll E. Jennings,. Philip B. -Menne- ' • - HOW,' , James habil,. • A. W. Hook. - er°r• In assuming the. "r..,Air.s.Melthight made a strong and lbrcible speeeh, rapidly passing over the issues of the campaign and earndatlrexhoiting all in -attendance to do good work during the kw days inter vening before the ' : October: election. He Introduceft air Wilson, who Was received with considerable enthusiasm by the mul titude ival,tendance. He, proceeded as fol la* f i k% '• • • SPEECH or ..NR..yaulps.; . • Mr. Chairman and ireltow- %r ens of ... .PittaterrOlk ••"---1 'in:if:glad to look in your ateamhig focal to-mght, for., they ,givp. me - assurance of a Victory on.Tnehday,neat. - I am glad to be in this great city, so distin guitibed irroarmountry . for Its enterprise, its 'vast energies; its wonderful" growth' and development,- and- 1 am , glad to behere for another rpasetti and that is that I . stand in a community that was true to the country In, the dark days of civil war; and is to-day as tine es it:Was:then. • ' • We are taught in holy writ that man was made in the image of God; that he fell from his original purity and was sent forth into the world, cursed for his sake, to eat his bread by the sweat of his brow. The pages Gilt Nati0r1,41414440/Wit4 Pt1r t .131 0 4.4041 311 us Wag the t txlWerficktuarnirtdful of the eared ' rights of a common humanity, haVe sought to avert from themselves the doom of the race by wringing from the weak the fruits of unpaid toil;, that to filch from their brother man the , bread gathered/by the( sweat of the r brows the privileged few ! have stained-ahe”world- ; withatrlines, and , ffiVe'led niillieneliito etiptiettY l i- farged•fiatt ! ters for human limbs, tortured the body, ' shrivelled the mind, darkened the soul, , and sunk the unprivileged many down to : the level of unreasoning beasts of burden. I " The world has been the theatre of an irre pressible eepl, ocnolbaratetwAte interests of privilege Iffirtehte"lnitr tfte .righm of the toiling many. Our own country • that began its existence by the procla motion of the emancipation of the masses • -from the thraldona of the few has been 1 st"litt l iNhas lusl=4o.4g: 1 EV; or es an scarred the face of common hn ; mortify. In our age this loss of marvellous -1 fidelity and beauty God bas given us to be • developed for human er and happiness; I this republhal ltigioilions ances try' upon the basis ofhuman equality, has I, been plunged into the fire and blood of ) civil war by those who would eat their I bread, not in the sweat of their own 1, ' Ittitaa.flittrithOlf)of qt,Wrlten a alfiljeg' struggle between privilege and caste on the one hand and the rights and in terests,\, of free labor on the other, 1 continues and will continue until perfect 1 liberty, perfect equality of - rights and - ' PriVile - ,- 3, k Fe, SWaVd c so,4lll. Than, when ' I our • • • r ". , ithiderbie.totire fall avail- I zation o ' the glorious :truth, that we are 1 bretbr •of a common father, that the rich and the : ong and the powerful shonld . .[shield, •rotect and elevate the. poor, the weakd the defenceless, wacawill come 1- 11 5 /14A l*EVAildritUt;l44llW.:4loll o tder tani will be red. Then labor. in the words of Mr. ebster, "will look upend be proud 1 in the dst of its toil ; " then the toiling millions will work out -4 condition of hu naanityhigher and nobler than has ever been ach'eved in an other portion of the glebtft,thead§l la ng , heart, ,the, tender e 4114143141), t untranaA ~ v eksert,OC A T the 1 1: n7 w lit, our country np so that , i it will w the admiration of the nations •.i and g the deter; of blessing down from the } /P-s_te, f i l.;;- - - ....- • i l u ,ollll-ouer t ot s Mier — nialOge , of-the . c itizens of Pittsburgh, this city so renown ,' ed for its manufacturing and mechanical .;.! Indrustries,.suctstleaheammly-farana of toil-: ".• 4 .' iv v lnl. who support themselves,:4e,wives iI 3 lLkat9lp. ARtiltleAladfalkelikbak - ei - .1". 4 11W AW L .- 0.-,portipia- , -of our i datintry O,VI I -annfh Vital- interests as • / 'tiektki. ugns ti aen ii; Atkhtaeettaleateitt of the, :I halted that fillitialtilded and -still continue todivide the people of the United Statee. • 1 The non utieeiltifahe.infrehiutt;:the pro • fessional man and the farmer, , standing in : - eiAt493..filn4ttia'sgr!rlkllg, tVa Wpm*. i sores, maz i rre t e con aeration of ;these pen 4 sii,"blit 2 eetitiellpect, self tier9)4sl 4, 7 erp, ,b0w5,.,_41, lave ey_i•.•,• eris I.lftrwtlitsie Javho' ~inherit` .', i i their bleed laid? zpisita ? their namelb ' Letr and italielthb Debi; theittedaitlia and ru l .4lP-cli , - 0 1/a- aortieeli4oatelte3part in imPeTsfullS atfuggleanow4cure,ed upon •- • Aseentry:: Othentatar to e i p t q c t r t or the' .. 1 eesolti and hnsnanitV b ut' h / kink. '‘‘. • 1 1 G0v 21541 e -g- arnatia i r74 l- is isi•on ' W e er - • 1 pies into the hands of men whobe lieve titikteitdialhthettlidtlabtifith.* 14 F ini Ml eketia " . ' l 4l l- 4 1 4•11, t ha t id h ed4Of .041 ..,,, 0 ' tin'ilio" "etO ' ! tolithatl;te' , 44 hiticed.4l4l!t.., l'aft net ' a ; 1 4 ihmorvi tt ...t I,„:34ribxonaita'or atateduie w co. Vs uo . irer soditlit4thea dte '' •"' ' F. PlhOe i rthdar'' ' •-• '. I)ti '. . - eit ' . • . ~,„- / , 9 .• .- • 4%. . Ewan. e perpe . • ... 4 Tryf Or - , sng men. ; The itepu ~.- -, 4 . • Vit . 4' . ' -' tie fee arestrivinglottite"eoale l / 2 0 - a went of the United A reseVat ;reservation - e t eaveVber ti r li orisod ifrat orth ' e tftleenttlk 2 df f iliciatatitaye.ri l bava beidiebittle , • - patty4sfereehtfithsfA4oetsine - c of •iter; opal_ 1 ,rifttatitHskes'andtMecA 4 he - wild and. ; wicked 40~ 1 -111tleeetnideitt4ifi k ..„ t iOhera founded upon the basis that all Men MN . , are created equal and have an inalienable right to liberty is a white man's Govern ment. The Republican . party, believing that we are„fiapren of a oommowiather, :that God - inaffe us'airdTehrist• died - for us, 'that every man should have the right to himself to the Smits of his toll and possess the priceless privileges .of intellectual and !l_lgal etiltereplebtatriv4ng4 o •Preas,o l fethr ilMbrtierr I:4qtreattertr - rfs by the lathers; ,and to make the bounds of freedom ;wider yet. The Democratic party, disown : ing the doctrine of human equality, has I been and, now - .IEF the otirattniOn Of. Privilege , and cast. The Republican party is fully `and unreservedly committed to that policy that shall give to laboring men of every color and race an eq;aal opportunity to pin, o f for himself compelenCe, dePe4deinOt sitions of power—tlie 40, •t '' dtO lll 4P 'of ambition. The Deft 41 . piirt,y, s ato*, i and has been durin4th ;- • trite= yea* !the enemy of the rights and interests of workingmen of the 'North and of , the South, rrepeat it. at tuktinkes,and on all occasions, and in ever§ fort4the , ,Detnectatic party of the United' 'EltatpsOnspired ll- Pe. malign counsels oftWog vita lirharbelepdi avow that capital should dWn•labor,areoind have been during the past fourteen years, the bitter, unrelenting enemies of 1 the rights and interests of\ free laboring rmen, black and* late. Vary working man m tbe Milted Statesowho loves his country and its rePublica a institutions, who would en large the right'and elevate the character of the sons of toil, should seize the first, the last, and every occasion to break forever the power of the Demodratio party", Every workingtnanshould - resolveuttlierising of i the sun, at the going down of the sun, and in the broad light of noonday, that he will do, whatiream;4edliatn:4l, a itteliticatormer liation-that4ets 4 ditdilinor t ed[4abse rated& graded the laboring man. There is not in any christian land on the globe a political organization so **tile teller rights and in terests of the wrirl4nktrien JO has been and now is the Deritikiatic party of the United States. El I •i• - More . than thirty , years .ago„ Calhoun, MoDuffy, Pickens, and the Calhotin school of nullification, secession and distil:Lien, proclaimed the slavery of the working men to be the great corner stone of the Re publican edifice. McDuffy contemptuous ly declared that when the masses of men stepped out of bondage, they branched into four sut-divisions "the hireling, the beggar, the thief and the prostitute." .Pickens' declared that 'there .never was a Society, Where one class would not prac. ticallv and substantially own another class in` some shape" or'. form': “Stieleity settles down into capitalists and laborers, the former will own the latter, either collect ively, through the gdreininent or individu ally through a state of domestic servitude. The only contest in the • World Is between the two systeuis." . , The Democratic leader§ of the South, disowning - the doctrines ."of Jefferson, Madison - and the Republican fathers, accepted, these monstrous doctrires of Calhoun, M'Duffy, Pickens and their associates. Liam mond. an Sher son of South Caro lina, declared on the floor of. the Senate, ten years ago, that "hireling manual la borers were essentially slat es. that they *tire the niudsills •of society." lielth t another disciple of the Calhoun sclool pre. nolittee4. 17113 8 130 d °kr a failurcvdedarati that the ordinance:of God condemns mankind to labbr,'"and 'certain 'Manlier 6etipalitnis •are incompatible with mental cultivation: and that slavery.produced a snperlueclass of gentlemen who were "substitutes for an order of nobility." Ruffin, of Virginia, who fired the Stet shot in the war and the last one nto his•oWn•hrains, desired sore: frm the hireling labor society of the North by reducing the laboring men to domestic bondage., ,t 7 • , 1 i ,, .. 7 . 1 ti.ilniiiilteiWather'of wvoluibe 6iiiiw failure of free society, summed up his sys tem in those worils;. f',lAheriyi forObe few, silayery,niCevbry fain - for thy` niasses." These doctrines, so apparent,were accepted by the,Demporatic leaders and the pressor theßentbtio imainfithitireise doitsintsit. Th found a government whose corner stone should restorutha involuntary servitudeof e workingmen, sa the Democratic leaders rush- I' ~,. A/VW ailia - bOttg:.. .-. • , V , " eon gg - preserve the nation 8 life, maimed hun dredsof.,thousandas maw etui., imposed ea lifustenr - quillOrrrbtintiblifilMfoO" : ,of dfilleriliFin IMO - , Or lA . tieepler I- The Republican party, that never fired :upon the flag of the country, never shot down its defeudere, ' t by,is ~esirles; 4v legisla tive andrescieutive acts' emancipated four and a half millions of laboring men and 10 2 0.440 - 195V11T freelSo t ern Denceraey;tha went in to the Rebe j bon to maintain the right of individuals to hold working ,'de slaves, haying lost, I that right ly the the'war, son.slit :through A. Johnson's policy of reconstrno- tion to maketlieousepoipsted laboring men and women of the Sout h the slaves. of 55e.1017., .43y ~Ay. wioa.,of ,Jegislative. acts theyrtonghtto - mitrMiftlfeir old doettine that society is dsvided A into capitalists and I laborers, that capital should own labor, and ? •if 3dCllfg,dl hboil id - diet bold' working men I asst ' ' riamil-- , lslaves," these working • men shoe d be made the, slaves of society. Tbe : Repudiate: party. hiving! , ibmancl : paced: the working men of the South from personal servitude, sought through a policy , 0 1.0 43 nfi '..F.F.-ii9Pl , 9 PrilliPtt4esetworking ! men from besiciming serfs or - slaves . in, any :other form; to save the emancipated work- I ingmen from,becominirthe - slaves of 'sod lety; to : give the poor white workingmen of the South; who l liaineedlinpoveriiihed'end degraded by the slavery, o( ,the black man; to give the Workliigthen 'Of thkt !section "of Abe coputry % an wportonity,,,t9,,estahlish schools for the education of the people—an 'opportunity, to diversify, their industries, : reconstruct and develop that section of the !country and open those States to the I rallli *ration of the ~ lablying , num of the old "world and the neat, and to build up that .sectichi of the Union;the Republican party ',adopted the policy of rovpstruetlou., .110 po licy of reeonstraciffite has erialbed the 791 1 , 81, '9ri th lisr. i tht t os4 so white, to fra c liberal co at tut! ns and oonstitu itions that secure equality' -of rights and pritileges andibbconrage die educationo :tiq people. under this resionstraction poi 'XV , if firn l l9:usaintainedthe rights, She i privileals amt.:interests of working 'mit 'will be assured; anelichoohl - for the,educa.,, Ition of Ow children of the pie will ~be established, and I -.bin wilt honored an& rercted, indastriee wilk ia , diversified., th large plintaticins w ' be , converted, Into small Candi, and s tha section of our eontrnonkoounto wilk enter on a oireer, - -or„, development of thd,realiAtion• of - 'which ~. ',her:people nuts dre am ed. -,By.liolding st black woxitingmen Okslavery wbite.yot , men in tbe Sftth Ind In the - North, were diehonorea. Th e workingmen of the. North felt the kineful shag:tows of the sliW Bolan, And tin* shrink from working fhir'4,ideinf compulsbil labor. EudgraNVlC rrep the. Old world, toy, avoided that feriThl,, on of the-40=6y, ifithough it , lady settled slid the londe'lrere th ee. n tiolErM 91 fan z gw,onto iv giumg , , hat s a fletelle los hunored an d :. boring tain5,4949,, ! iyispyjet li f,hie should nnogrue ed4=l9o end il t iversdfy Indus = re s -ail. ' ' ittlistilibi ' drab anfkftelki 4 Europe ikmitittk_49,9lefit.Phe t South. That rule setstioh is nolto ikodo, the„lsibering , en of tbf!IIVA,OfIkO riftheea- ID Weil. rights; . *m' ate its war-wasted fields bloom again. Before the close of the war I.o+, .7 I .daBl Ade:sr3l7,42,i Arl y,l/i raoli Ter! THU PtS DAY, ( rank Blair, then the advocate of the rights of workingmen, now the champion of priv- Olege andbaste, looked fbrward to this em-; ;igratiot as the hope bf the' Sotith. He then !said "I have - . seen:myself . how the resistless Imareliof out'victOrktus armies is fbllowed," 'and theli bietotieeeeenred by a peae.fue. tide ;of population, sprang' from the loins of the igreat North; In viging with them. their , indus ; try and *fit,- to kat the citouncts and reetere 'the Oastelitificfed by the fierce emillicttl of war, 'and even bringing a better, oivilization and a :more healthtulprosperity than ever yet re.ign ied in the fair binds of the - South. ' - The city in.hich,l live, and which in part, repro serif on thid floor, heti-RISEN RENEWS]) !der the,influences of this life-giving tide." When Trarile-Blair ' httired these •Word a he expressed the anticipations of the people ;of lOyal -Agihrien. Congressional 'recon-' atruction was inspired by the desire to give peace, law,: order, prosperity to: that por tion of our country. The late man holders and the late land holders,lhe men Who be ;Roved that laboring men should be slaved in some form; be the itfaies of 'nap ital, the advocates • of privilege and caste, oppose the .of ,-,%recon struction, and Franke Blair ' has iatiomin iously abandoned the rights r andinterests of wofkilig - then, and in ' thtr Interests of Privilege and caste threatens the overthrow of:the` reconstructed Governmentli by ex- • ecutive power. The Democratic party were the enemy.of freedom, free labor, and free laboring men, declared in National C.,nven , tion, that this . betielleetil policy of moon , structioti is revolutfoluity; unconstitutional • and void. and demands its forcible over throw. That man who would overthrow the concreseintial polleifoOf reeenstruction ;is and must be held to be the enemy of the emancipated-working man, the enemy of the White mad of the South; and the ' enemy of the mechanic and working .men of the ''North: Mechanic s' • and' working men, of Pittsburgh and of Pennsylvania,. see to it, rprity+ you, that on Tuesday next, you rebuke at the ballot boxes the men who would reduce the new made freemen to serfdom, who would continue the dogre ' dation of Itibpoor,white men of the South. and who would close that section-of the country against the mechanics and laboring men of our oivn and other lands. The Republican party is.in favor of.the canal rights Of man and against equal tax ation; the'Democaatio party is against the equal rights of man-and for equal taxation; the Republican party, In its policy of taxa tion, discriminates in favor of the poor,the mechanics and the workingmen of the oo utit ty. - Democratic 'party f inpp,OVs this diseilmliairibn in favor of the poor. the mechanics and the workingmen, and em , phatically,declarett its policy to no eqUal taxadon of every species of property ac cording to its value; this doctrine-was bor rowed from Soo. C. Calhoun; it has the, same origin as the doctrine that wont ingmen should either be the slaves of individuals or the slaves of society. The Republican party meets this doctrine, this Dem doctrine of the equal taxation of every species of property according to its value, just as it meets the proposition to make workingmen the serfs or slaves of society, and denounces them bath. This pomocroic roirp of taxation;' is hostile to the interests of workinginen; and the man who supoorts it, no matter what may be has praesslopti,- !It she ~enemy of the and chanic * and •Ittiftifiglateir of 'the — United States. THE QUESTION OP FINANCES Blair tells us that the question cf taxa tion and finance is of no account whatever; that; it is idle to talk about it. Seymour tells his friends to push taxation. Well, now, I say to Seymour and IDtair both, and to their friends that we Republicani in teed to push the question' 'to their hearts? content. (Applause) ~., ; tb the first place, remember' that ever y dollar of this taxation.-every dollaref WO seventeen hundred millions of ~ principal atter interest we have already' piild towards tbeexonstis of this ,war-,--,eVery,dollarof -it WtetrefightemobAluteouritryftiher-fqxi4 tacy of the Democratic government. When you reao3 . 9 l l4,44 , JAßCretlittatj)*. :that to the Democratic party you we every forth ing:adAbOse ~ i t ax ;bills:I; goes titt the support of the godless rebellion we oreebadd Ont:noViadi.ltettisulbite` another thin ; that every dollar of the twenty-five hun millienfa wojtoveyetrto pay, was put tlitelriddiftrylirttie — oonntry by the Domocrutle party. Well, now, gentle ' 111en.....10'-prdaldti.....U.thit-ttaptutafts...of. the war the Asp,ttlacen_party had to, arrange the system atlas,--they Itaff to take i the responsibility and they so adjusted, it Ito make the bordfiro or•Wftron Mare* lightly as possible on the, productive .interc este of,therfountry.'-froM the workingmen of the country. In !he first place about !three-fifths *tithe duties: assessed on im portsere .assessed .on wines and...brandies and 'articles' or luxury that enter`'hito the co ns um ption of :the more wealthy portion of our countrymen. About two-fifths of the ; &diet'. are"invosed ,onthe lirpoettesatiett of life—UV:mica, toffoe; sugtir and (Watt articles that enter Into the •;eoirsn'Mptien•bf the'masses 'of the PeOple.' We lax' the ;luxuries of life ; we tax the neoesserisS of lifelut lOw , as- weisibly - eftril--'We-flts.. criminate in favor' tinot .nic g l indaatfy and? tell yolf gen tlemen we mean to eon i thane to . do- Ky. 4s voice, 4 1thet'ifilght.") /NOW, 'the Demderatie party 'reqpires that 1 taxes shalt be equally- ; aesessed woo all species Of 'prepertyticoordlng to''ititaftle. IThat is their position. . Where did. it some ; tom ? . The Datiatieratio - partOr - likiliffiebit4ill the theories of Calhoun In•;regard to twat ! Lion, , and it stands, aomMitted` before, the country, pledgedito_the fallaatent in, favor of testi* the' ifectiiitarleetitthe pear an , cording toth,eir„value, 41# they . , 4ilc,.#o.,iiii ! uriemi:ortliiVriett.l . ,rhatl , 110 theiti tpOildon, We hold them te w It.. The hie wriggle 1 1 lout of iL 'lnbar, beat]. ' We mean to hold -1 them to thattit_Wpoettio4llY46 Sow:ince 1 I I t a h ny rgt y s t i h ii a d t i s n u ter p es r t t e s h it t , l tabsa the l..enhei r g n mb Of r iof the Vogel States. [Cheers.j,ln the time lef war, when this nation'. needed n eitey* IMuch, we'akeeiid 7 ait'lfiddine"-tart'' the, people. iwas4essingit eaeatnpt he [ incomes under six hundred t.'ddifaxtl,• *Oi l that w giwupt*. nineteen . .didlariC,ouC i pf e,vitrittatenty.iat the4lo3olllllhatill ;try:, atc ,;'elly.eo 'fro.,,,,zewirtffp: .taXTIO - Wor nplett, n ye o m. , c h mi les, the : gplit,bed-Y-elr 09 117; 6 40PF 1 N. 'Those persons who — had 'famines - from ill 'hundred to five thousand dollars paid' an dricope taitAfAv.ol - PetNeffak t rittxmititt thousand ' &distil - tdn 'iiiirbefft;figt . * not equal taxation. The Republican party does not belldvishrelpftd•ttaitlon. • We be lieve in the equal rights of man, but not thg elti4 l .tlefig. 49tItif.tfilk !. 0 . . t :'D We 15e are in so og t e peop le as to ( bearl as. lightly _as possible on the_produc 'titre intata itil)lithe ileib#l6 2 4Voirthe Ike loessaries of life. We believe In diserimi. tatin• ,4p ' V 4,.... , I , le P C . S I ,FAT= he ' i 4.i. , . ' ii. , , i- .' 4.•.......-.1.. _ a 8 SO: :i, . *. : !., 1 ;,,, , 4 41 ' ..,g - .S. ' . •, . mu: hited- ca '• , :• , •• • ".• • • i; : , in atentn• • - tßtyit t o sell! .81 ,!. ", , , : ey, - , 4 ,, , , r 4 eu. ...far... ;; .1 ! ' ' . ''.. e . 6 , 1 . 4 iii , Impanel*, . ° " 11 "k 1 .-: 7 • ' ' . " 0 . imr„wenwsy,,,,,tolo4l 7 . t= "iitopeotto t .,o,l6..l.pon, _..0 =Aka donne& .peepleeiy. . did , ft , in'A fairciri4( tthe'-ibaseits , T . .}):0,,./ fi uple-3f the workingmen., [Ap *WI We Republictuas - intend 10 Stand y that p . elle; eevill'neVe agr,-e tif tax tinge of the wed:- legal( it small incomes at th 4 e tax), the Inceities, or the SI ire aid thogreett-thp' italisi Itry. (Cheers.) We give] tee that -wil'ivitle , 'never tax si and tea as high as we tax ail ind brandies.. We give them will never, tax a gallon ae We will - a galkin of whir ter.] We give., them notice p k f y. mi that , will not tax the tools dl meohanics (cries of "g d," • "sood,") and the little homes and 111C0f.the..ROSIfe.....tho-10r4.0. of the dray, ~and the - prop firty of the, poor laborin men, thad'themecharifeS;und ; the workin men, of the country, need, for, ,the support Of themgelVeivatillithe ;IWO ,ones of thel household. We will not feet ,the burden ,of this government equally upon thstn dthe accumulated espial and great interests of the country. That is our refitition Tornio "44 5 ..1iti11a good one,") and it is a , position in favor of the produo tive intere; of the- country • and of •the. wciekingro ~ ,and we Mout to live by ItP stand by it, or fall by it: (Cheers.) I saw e t a ' nail. .was wing down street a Democratic 'banner yri the words "equal taxation", upon it. vekflaboring man in America; .every m nicreavery. larnzer:and every businesa m nwlie cares for the productive interests of this 'county, and wants to de velop its Mighty resources and carry the county- , -forward , eand- -.upward- it •is ca reer or eyosperhy and power—l say every One of us should . spit upon and trample: upon..- that . 1 -tiectrine -- against the toiling masses. [Cheers, and cruse( egood.") Pendleton, [A voice, "a Copper he, wo , Made , ,a 1 Speech ;when; thee rebels were h taking their leave and going out to raise the' banner of revolt against 'the country, in Which . lie told them that he Lid them farewell so tenderly that they would be foreyee touched by the ,recollec ' Hon of it; [laughter,l whia made a speech' In which he told these rebels that we could not Put them, down by the power of the' 'Government; that we could not amino,' them with armies and military power', —a speedh, that so pleased the rebels mat Benjamin r of Lonisilna, in his farewell 'speech to ;,'the Senate boasted that when they were gone they would have friends in both Houses of Congress to maintain their cause, for the speech of the eloquent Rep resentative who could, from his home in , Ohio, look ont • upon the 'green fields of Kentucky, lingered yet in their ears. (Ap plauae.) NVlienCongress was laboring against the apostate'Demoeracy of the coun try it had to raise money by what is called a forted loan, - and that is by - making a gov ernment promise to pay legal tender, Mr. Pendleton denounced it. He said that these greenbacks would go out to the country with the mark of Cain upon them and would be wanderers and vagabonds in the earth. The country then was forced to adopt this as a temporary but not as a permanent pol icy. We had to depart front what all finan ciers and writers upon political economy dci'ned to besound principles. We did it to save the country end it helped to do it. (C'heeni-r)--Teis legal tender act had the 'same etle.e as the act to enroll and draft , men. That act forced all sections of the country to make a Wt._ contribution to the defence of,tme country. This legal tender act Nuts omnipotent in ita power, for it ena -bled; 'he guyernmegt to command We prop erty and resources or the country for the country's defense. Mr. Pendleton then op posed it. Six years passed away and last year this great financier from Ohio came to the conclusion that the way to pay otT the National debt we have incur curreti was to issue and rain down like 11110 W ll .kee upon the country greeubaeks. [batighter.] 'lliese- wanderers and vaga bends, these bills with the mark of Cain upon them, he 'Wanted , ' Increased from three hundred and fi y-six millions to ; tweoty l five: .., -hundred millions. Wet hairs a National - debt of twenty one hundred„ milltleu., _of dollars, a rded- VS r ; WeAlitl4l .aToe2 lit ( 01 1 1 7, bun-. rea infilioo or.itourinterest,..beizing debt. ; Be propoMa;tollaY offthb Interest bearing - debt.nyglying;the game suno,unt of non intarestioditilug_dett ToitlhAvlittlY note fur one thousand dollars at six per cent. i I have not tee ) money u pay rit,- - prit shall have motley enough to pay it. rdo not ' like to pay yow *tweet, At 1 1, propose to pay you my note of one thousand dollars without 'interest:'--Would' that' pay My . debt? Clearly not. That is just what Mr. Pendleton proposed. (Laughter.) If it onled , the, bondholder-4nd lick.- , rati y o , Sekviminr ' before be mounted. - the greenback platform told us there were about two and spudt , millions ;; who were : interested in thebbisda—ive litiglit not feel , donllceply - apotrltre . subjett;:althtlyghthe ' faith, the dionoiatid the:nairtabt the °elm : try would be involved in it. (Applause.) But it proposes to water onP aUftetiby; to depreciate the greenbitcks and no clasd.ot ;men will'belliel 4 Injured it at; the work . imp:llea...Do yen believe you Auvlieep your mills and 'shops going here under that sys tem? :Dcf..yOu.:belitorci that thaproditottvd interests of the ;country will be promoted !by it? Will not; Wet few i dollars of geld WO' ) have go abroad lii'pay for"the iMportioef ; foreign manufactures :and ,foreign work . men?, Will pot our productivefinterests hei, stricken glow& Im:cot-Mir - ctirreney be ao 'lilftingotetett that there wilt °ems °pm err from the masses of • the ; people to re ' pudiatit tbetrneneif ' Thilifsouly a spite' it. ! tO flotallbCOdifatiy Wlth - IffitoSr anti then • reeudiate:=llll4linalottand , repddlation are , identical.-Mr. Pendleton, in his epeeeh ; here, took Weft:Mind 'that if th'iisluMersi sold their; corn fur Iwo, collars, and :fifty eentw;:.',..piir . holhelli litiliflo .their wheat for Aye dollars, ~ . and , then invested their - tioney 'la ' the 'tp'ublic lands they ivauld not 'bode anything. We i have eel, apart the.ribliu domainforAtetual Isettlers,for,,Alia...lgeo_ , .. wwkioamoo, and for the /iii4l/64;Deksitatili-'Pti~oW pro- I porn to .deloreckito, the ,currenc7. that the I simisiiitdotiVelitObdy 70 the dixnain•OP the retry and thee destroy -the homestead pollat (4 volee—ruttett'alhe idea.t , )- Does Ibe propoee to pnt.the public domain of the lOurg 101 PtheOltr ei tieffi leril 44 1 0 41 etP. tto it ' Mr. Pend San - wants, .tit,:ilinoti whitt—liaturt-tlitt-talltidellmer front 1111(1144..49Q101.41111)0 1 if for I heed', money. Dm.ZheVrepose to pay the bonds in itimmetiitack ! rpm; Itothen raise the battle cry of 4 cio iidri tro d i Ito return tottard'utoneyttt Id Ma:lon, gen !tlemen,rnat ytheitmatecipie Avvr,vallit, will lbs fortftredintietageettitrotWatertpr your jelinifliCY,,Will- - ,for- 4 . ' y ay. dragge.; i(Lacighter.) When it Is to then vantage {of the Wbrklitgiliot endWenaen. v,f , Pitts tairighip buy' adtilteMted - fOod; then it Will ibe tot heir advanMoA,§enreelatexbe 03 lreney. No clavililiriWbsel~framit Weep irk hayAng a l ft eNwenvy Il i, I 133 en tMo'ittppert themselves anniiialies . itia lui xt rei iou ELAIOANL-11114. C. 8; iB€B. of hundreds of millions of dollartu .The people of the United States, will E rt flui year 1668, produce ;five thousand Millions of dollars. It- will-take something moiti" than three thousand millions .to RuPpurt them. We shall this year add to tha cap ital of the. country nearly two thousand ni Miens of dollars, almost enough to pav - the National debt. :We are doubling our, wealth every eleven years. We are increasing our - wealth to a marvelous extent, and no portion of the country - is adding more•to it than the city of Pittsburgh and the Bur• rounding country." if not. really anins ing for a gentleman to come from Ohio and try to convince the people of your city that they are growing poorer, every. , day. (Laughter) iThe truth is that the people of the United States'on no 7th of Dabber were ever worth as, much,as they are this 7th day of October.. (Cheers.) This coun try is more prOsporous to-day than it ever was on any 7th day of October in its his tory. The I,ruth is, weareancreasing ,the wealth of,this country quite fast enough for•our dim good. `What wO'need is not so much Increase inmsaltb, as the .proper tribution of the wealth of the country. Mr. Thindleten said' th'eiixpenees for the `year to come—this present y.-ar—would be' four hundred and ninety millions of dol lar?. We have apprepriated, abopt three hundred millions of dollars, a Inindred and' ninety millions less! then he says we , shall , expend. He tells us the tax on the people , this year is five hundred millions of dol -1 Lire. He did not•iell us we had reduced taxation one hundred and sixty-seven-mil -1 lions; that all we claim we shall raise dur -1 ing the present year is three hundred 'and seventy millions. But Mr. Delmar is inak-• wig . figures to show that we, cannot I do that. While ,Mr. °Pendleton eharges us with putting such a tax' upen the people Mr. Delmar telle•us welitivn re-' duceethe tax so much xvitoshall ; not have money enough to pay the expenses of the Government. We have reduced the taxes 5167,000,000. We shall raise from $350,000,- 000 on the let of July , next. ,•Ernless we ) have a large Inan war ,we shall have, money enough i di n 'the TreasurY,' and' I' 'don't want, too much there., I want Lose°, the Government administered , economi cally. and abmit the only way to make the Goveniment' economical is to cut' down taxation. , , , • ) ,' . . Our Domocralic friends during the pres-, cot canvass are making profesaions of friendship 'for the workingmen. • They have opposed durliag all these • years the emancipation of the workingmen, and wo men of the South: Thar have opposed the policy that tends to the elevation of)the poor working.white men of the South. They have opposed a policy that:tended to ele. Tate labor and honor wdrkingmen. and all over the tSouthern. country, these (Democratic leaders, while they are denying the right of the emanci pated working:nen, are trying to force them to , vote the Democratic ticket. These , poor emancipated workingmen know too much to vote the Democratic ticket. A year ago last spring, after we passed the reconstruction act, I made a tour in the 1 southern States, addressing the People 1 something like thirty times. , I found mine opposed to negro endrage. Southern men then believed they c :aid ooetrol the vote • of Colored men; but finding:that they Were lin favor of the restoratoration of the tinier: On the basis of loyalty and liberty, educe-- , tarn and development, they now violently denounce reconstruction, and childiehly prated about negro smorepiacy. While de. eying rights and privileges to black men, while threatening to starve them unless they voted contrary to their own oonvic i 1 tions of duty, the. Southern Democracy are seeking the votes of the men whose rights, they deny, and who's& privileges they are pledged to take from them:" • - • - P'. , , .The Democracy ask; he workingmemlto i Vote their tieketr,,tead °tie, of the reasons as,-,signed' is that they propose to tax the'little property of the ~Workingman , equally with the property of the same vale of the inch:, man, to tax the necessaries`. of the werk-, ingmairegtiallfWith the luxuries . of 'the' rich man. The Democratic party,J saythera. to night.,,hasno claims upon the support of, the .workingmen of the 'United Staten., (Ohsera)'l trtist-that the workingniett•te Pittsburgh and of P4M l lll.9 l vediamtarerneel to . give a .yote. forgtio Seyntourv, and, rifa all" theirVo '4 Genetar_laralit• VdieeirliNeWill.") ?We" intend' to altget ) teral,Giiint'PieniderA' of the "Mitred: StitteabY the votee'pf dearly all.the 'Bathe; , and to elect a majority. , from • - seVenty.tive to' one hundred in the Hone& Y Wehavb four id the Senate, and, that is' a•satisfacto-: ry majority. . By, the election; of General Grant me propose to restore completely, the; unity of the couniry,"hretaii,by, the Demo- i trade par,y. We proposele seetird .eoptd, rights tb''all AMerican citfzemf, (a„voide; "thats right,")' and - protede Athericap,eitf 7 ' eons everywhere itt• thinking' their ' eta thoughts and speaking 'their bail 4 , iiintle mantis, and acting- as they . please, ,pro vided. they do / 410 - Violate r•• liivr • or" (interfere with the ?rights of other people. I (Cheers 4 ~, We . propose. to appreciate:l4or ;currency and make ; our promise. to i pay legoal" to gold. We tilliose te reduce tha interest' on our national 'dila bY-Making It . _ the interestlefatheb6udholderte iiiakeWf ehattga"- We proposal-sal enbottrage indugt. try and protect . thellaborcif our country)) develop the reaonroask)f %hitt mighty media 'rental en3piritOod kaaitiveatixtodeveloN ,We propose 40 eaecartlo l ._ education, ~to bug up the 1 3 50 1 1 thPrn 144 4, 4 ifßici'c ~91 1 .FrAull,:a Itey y ,encouraging , piaigtAp•ki/r9RI tlnt North and the old werld tto:ge thore r ag*ey go to other parts of' the doim"trytand i ta,pre? Rid ' them when 'they 'hafe•donii ? tie: :If Tootiths and Cabb, , and Pirate Semmes,' ad& I . Btt tither Forrest,: 'and' Wadellainptlini de 'not like the carpet-baggers, theaftheee 'nevi I must: gol out, for-thee carpet-beggers:willi ' stay OUZO._ ).::( ,I , ; - . ..11, r;t1.1.1,; 'ldol In .our en°4 ll 4 t° , COM unity, Alellee;Aud, 1 proipeatY tb,the,l:47*.lfßlW4,oo.Act I,4if Pennaylvalgai on 'Euesdayoun - yon. shi i remember ciii the 3d day of 341y;1 tfC 'bettfe.,OrGetitesburki. The tehel'AL tier brought up one hnittireif andlki ideeena artillery end( for throe' , holitWt~" 1 and shell' upon the gleriOne hereeteafillild , Republic.' -Yon, wdi , vreinetnber.: that he ;wasted : his - oolardnew,l.iand :,shetriech ,them on that glorious old , tariny. ;And you Will rememtairAgit. army.ponred their shots into thehoiggvapc,,4he advano int enemy and destroye4 We °lir ,ribellitni forever and i'Vetg.. l ld s ebe ) Our' opponents are' 'tlitlithigittililisiraidld' ;battles. ' They are mateiftlid elf PetitisylvlV mkt.' .They will -bring' itcrbeite everylioltee they possess to carty,this Stateelchowleg if: it hPY IC" It.theY.ll,Bo,lolo, ,, ilLea. of Ripawlyt.i ivalntai one , t o It that if Inillllealfthenthqn: 1 5 1 4 13 deUt7. 44 the-Si •• " thiigf447 'Viet' you roll VI , :Ai ..1 eRIoPFA a 4 1 41 2 : nit and breok 'f r ‘ r % . 7 ..):. Vethe power ' iti A, , . 3 „ T,. 11110 it. "(Val ' , .j,, t 4.0; , I are artjtnen 1 the- 1 - itte r • • ;that were were-% with Ibeliot dttr . Fr.that gee. ellihnplhaP , Mete . lug •ocnintry.,l: Lo zeirebt Ahtintt • - ` 1 . 41 Wllllloll9lMtlipeJavdSh i tspillr lam i na a annuiglVElM Ml*MPROWnatileinSA /. 4 2.42r,, -~ ,, t „. 131v.r . e f . 1 . I• , • Uri e f p v. . - ril•fliriithoniko ' • a ls . 14 i.itlio.iint cur-atm-4,1 , t ii ' • V 1 .'• '. l , iolviteittesi are glted tetliefewiltidlid • iibt are put nponrtiioroatkivjeld OlePnititiltihdt , have . been and are now aga oat the rights of the toiling millions EMI NUMBER 241. of this , country.' ',Go,tto po matter whether'-: they were ,born in Scotland, on' the trams' of theirlismos the Shannop L or.„,the„Rtdueom i paattaf Viva they were .borii, they , are: to be , oriv.ctio6- - trymen. 4 Take them' by, the :lsnit. Vett the Irishman WAS John Erlibels Lighting for the . , red •of the wrongsof Ireland; and that i for the election of General Grant.--The - Liberals of France and Ger many were all With writs lathe war.vEyery enemy of the rights of Ireland, everxene my of Germany, and, every of the Republics of Europe 'is against the Republican party 'and 'Por_tlie.linnio cratie party. (Voloa,that'sse.,Anstiqii MA's earth the men. who believe h 1 elevating the masses and inProying,the,eatillitreac/flbe human family are for the eh : tritest - et Gen. Grant and the triumph of the,ROPlAlloan party of this country. (Cheerii.)...Wo ere fighting the same battle ~f or .timeameildes we fought forin 'tbe Virlltiret*l Iwe know the liberal men lin l world are withus; "itrid:Vata!kiifi " whose hand has been noilaiblitaann during the dark. hours of. the. years, will be with da to kilese':.lln) )0',14e great contest in vrhien we are- Ongitged,:lbr we are fighting . 'His battles.ol3thallattler of our tx)mmon humanity. ` _(Prolonged cheers.) ; The meeting then adjourned'. THE CAPITAt - Union BrotherhOod , ' alt on the PReddcnt-rT4o,oZdtnaneVll. , :,reau--;•Reve nue, Aplioinktneiiits. FBy.Telegraph to tho Pittebxrgh 4aiette.3 WAJAUNOTO.Nr 43 .et , ObAr, 7.1811 E- L afternoon the Supreme CirtaleptAhe ) Brotherhood of the UniOn, now. cirtswicut , , • here, visited the President of theyp.ipd; States by appointment. The lter "giork, Wow Jersey, Dela Ware, Pefuukylvitnia„ Maryland, District of Columbia andyik- - ginia' delegates were severidlyintredereed, when the President, in responitte to the re* .l elution that thay came to pay their respect to him, not only' as the Chief Mailditt - te, but as a member of the fratertifty; aalthe :* felt more than thankful for thie raanipsta ton of friendship, and expred the Jiope thatahey wouid all hereafter ineef udder more favorable circunistances.: iTtie•Bibth erhood of the Union is, a, patKlotie,ArtiAtte ri trial and beneficial organization,; A enter, just issued friniathiSiVar Department, directs General Dveri,Uneedf Ordinance Bureau, be,relievedfreincipirge of the Ordinatice Bureau upon the iitiem b4ng of the Court df Innuiry, appOitifedby a special order September 1Uth,,14 continue until the conclusion of-its invent!ation. The same order directs' Col. S" g 'Ben-" nett, of the Ordinance Depar merit; to re port in person to General Dyer, -tctessist:- him while berm.° the Court. , The following Internal Revenue appoint ments were made to-day : _•1 Gaugers—John E. Warren and ELT:NC:at son, First District, ItMsouri; John and Bon3amin Todd, Fifth District, IllirviisV John P FritnoiS, Seventh Distriet, J.llitioia. Storei*pers.--josoph IV.Ridgloy snit Itob-i ert - Spi3i.oar'li.'eoettufbistrlet: and virilyi* Entwistle; Fifth'rdstrtet, , Llinnisi ; , rias PontnissE OP "COMA. '1 '3; The published statements that °wink -to the revolution ip. Spain, this, Gevepunentr is interesting itself about the - Pure Nise of - Cuba, are altogether untrue. The s uhfietl hag uot - been mentieuetl in the CatbinetOtor has theSeeretary , .ef ,State 9/T.Leme views uPettit. d,i -- • - f., , ,-3711T.11W) CritLEAIiFS.- ti td "1341 Blot' and Bloodshed—Negroes KIIIT . C.vd, , Wounded--An Editor Caned , 011Tefegisiht vie +itialilikAiviii:V l A ---_ ANzapYouiplititotniten-4.krNati:ol4tadldi ;dispatch to the Tribune, dateotcthergth'd stiStmtlAtillirgoactepanode4VolhAtaNilhas- Pikliesly, imOpfalatisaaiiiisiPresiM e: !of'his sc - bool: Ben llv's trjertlejgtethreit :when he persuaded the Ihttbr ••W getay lielhedebsclut wouzataissbeittiii thellireet 144 16 01 ( !ii .11tripreabS1 MAW*. MIA) ec ted a gang o iirie men mencett :slaughtering the negrobit'l bileiv" . tfr= leawk.ilallctinortateeitilatximtiitakicinadi ne- Roes maref i lleit thid ,wooride4.,. / Thp office - of Vie - Midi per, elhz•agresis, we4uttecl; ;its type an preQes hrokitiiiiltahe att - oet,f, _ 'And Pr.:PAra,Rd, 4 4 l o 4 4.itanditor , kkruched. ; The New Orleans 27ir/e4, of the 5 rap_.66:70;.; that fi ft een" 'llepliblibans - Mid threi3 - Dristri6.- 'oats were alwoltilied . at Bhi ? evepott: AP4ed PRlre. lB 4 ,- 1 44 Possi*lPAPhtiMP9un trv. k ` - qtci of the FreedmetiVellareau l mlii),Avssivient-1 - % bx ( Iliargfte .41191F reau he e; to , lives }gate the trou bles_iq , immediatexamen of ithebuthitaillia senai-ty. ii -bctwee r ..heMitpt t. Lain Csellepublidan paper , and r figtdwitgrdii3l ;ffdifieW ; tides e rlistitAlittbie:tX44olllltio abadbTi ttlivr i rvarl e post ii i ,„ _a • ;A! yrepscp, wis chtfulaisit arg;t4Pl 4 lgroal U 4444 1 13 0 63 bbiutirr eeidn kll .anrKcorii era were dispatch to aid infaimbrz short time that - mite itickfriki frYArikmd Opeleurias,,appigentlyAVF; gattitherind pi epared for finch" arieoca Mon. Several bodies of negroes were DIV* iiiPdAispetseti: ; by efforts Ai istwillgenikeal both OlbriAlkticl-white,whehact,milllnkrt thetneOlYee' with 014 'Mr 'lam remrdieg, Behtleyri Otte : body;: littwevetimotopt , negro who 'called himself Captain, reftusgh to disperaewbeßertllgad 0.49 4 11ert 44g_ht ' arid bforksmsi &go istountiellpillinikOoriiirck r ViAteltrwiTiti two 7 2 84 417StViir ,riuraber' o horses bb on ag to-. . ; killed. The negro who called . . t %gala waisik.UP4; i•ElAtiorAtiel militoes - • Pt si Tri 44A9441 , 4 -d i a. 6 alltenl tbeldivilr ttheit g. rocs were executed with someorMsddfou ut::WI: S 3SA . 11 444 the um* belmiblg t,kghti aYStdwitiAlliftimaa'tirt,U ofiCipleniusWanttisKir ?s 6 g ei te frY i lir)ment t h e gnut lias o ri' ' the St. Landry .Ptogresa was wit • 4 1ina 104114earporisdi, whitdinitiihras rilVatifficAllrF eli V 4 R.iwnW72 Lin a . n 'were randiaikillaildllt ' ' titit :reported having been shotosshillimillisigiwz his on T ~Qp Iparistissuwts veiferitbr4cribilloTilettr - q•se NOll-ilritirt‘PlNA l loi NW" ik an n woun 4 Vitilfg,llll,nl3 *tiled add fifteen or' WWI 11 2:" sSifitesksmthillsqlftdiate • - • .4 ' .."iti t n el l • S r• ' -ntley was ; • • alliaL 4 , 4 " ll , ti li kuli a i 4 ,41 M; ; ; • Ha `ibis! NOW WO' bisoatityrigAiro, 14 11 441 t hatrin t rt i an f tir n a mbet the black. Armed =canted loatire. l2 ale, however, still kept tip. la r t 1 =DE Ell